Rabih Mroué

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Rabih Mroué
ربيع مروة
Born
Rabih Mroué

1967 (age 53–54)
Beirut, Lebanon
NationalityLebanese
Alma materLebanese University (1989)
OccupationActor, playwright, visual artist
Spouse(s)Lina Saneh

Rabih Mroué (Arabic: ربيع مروة‎, born 1967)[1] is a Lebanese stage and film actor, playwright, and visual artist. Rooted in theater, his work includes videos and installation art; the latter sometimes incorporates photography, text and sculpture.[1]

Biography[]

Born in Beirut, Mroué lives in Hazmieh, Lebanon.[2] He is a grandson of Husayn Muruwwa.[3] He graduated in theater in 1989 from Lebanese University,[2] where he met his wife, Lina Saneh.[1][2]

He has been creating theater pieces since 1990.[2] Theater in Beirut revived in the years after the Lebanese Civil War, but Mroué and Saneh, who frequently collaborate, were among the first to push into avant-garde territory (and away from European influences), using venues such as the Russian Cultural Center, makeshift halls, and private homes.[4] His works since the late 1990s "blur and confound the boundaries between theater and the visual arts", often using screens and projected images.[4] Writing in the New York Times about Mroué's theater group, Kaelen Wilson-Goldie commented that "they are to Beirut what the Wooster Group is to New York: a blend of avant-garde innovation, conceptual complexity and political urgency, all grounded in earthy humor."[1]

Mroué's performances, although scripted, are designed to appear more like improvised works in progress, reflecting his continuing theme of inquiry, focused more on provoking thought than presenting spectacle.[4] Mroué has written of his own work, "My works deal with issues that have been swept under the table in the current political climate of Lebanon,"[2]

Mroué's 2007 piece about the Lebanese Civil War, How Nancy Wished That Everything Was an April Fool's Joke, toured internationally. Banned domestically by the Lebanese Interior Ministry,[1] it premiered in Tokyo.[2] The ban was eventually lifted.[5] In 2012, a series of photographs made with mobile phones at Homs, Syria showed persons killed during the fights of 2011/2012. Copies of the photographs were shown at dOCUMENTA (13) at Kassel, Germany with the title Pixelated Revolution.

Mroué is a board member of the Beirut Art Center.

Awards[]

Works (selected)[]

Theater pieces[]

  • The Journey of Little Gandhi (1991). Adapted from Elias Khoury's 1989 novel of the same name.[4]
  • Extension 19 (1997).[4]
  • Come in Sir, We Are Waiting for You Outside (1998). Collaboration with Tony Chakar.[4]
  • Three Posters (2000). Collaboration with Elias Khoury.[4]
  • Biokraphia (2002) in collaboration with Lina Saneh.[4]
  • Who's Afraid of Representation (2005)[1]
  • How Nancy Wished That Everything Was an April Fool's Joke (2007).[1] Collaboration with . Premiered at , Tokyo, Japan.[2]
  • Looking for a Missing Employee[6]
  • Yesterday's Man (2007), in collaboration with and Tiago Rodrigues, premiered at La Mercè, Girona, Spain.[2]
  • Theater with dirty feet (2008). Premiered at , Hebbel-Theater, Berlin, Germany.[2]
  • The inhabitants of images (2009). Premiered at Art Dubai, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.[2] Originally a lecture/performance, later a video installation.[7]
  • Photo-Romance (2009). Collaboration with Lina Saneh. Premiered at Festival d'Avignon, Avignon.[2]
  • The Pixelated Revolution (2012). Premiered at PS 122, New York, New York.
  • Riding on a Cloud (2013).

Video[]

Installations[]

  • With Soul, with Blood (2003).[7]
  • I, the undersigned (2007). Premiered 2008, Manifesta 7, Trentino-South Tyrol, Italy[2]
  • Noiseless (2008).[7]
  • Grandfather, Father and Son (2010). Premiered 2011, Prefix Institute of Contemporary Art, Toronto, Canada.[7]
  • The inhabitants of images (between 2009 and 2011)[7]

Film roles[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Kaelen Wilson-Goldie (18 August 2007). "Lebanon Bans Tale of Fighters in Militias". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l Rabih Mroué, Foundation for Contemporary Arts (grant recipient page). Accessed 22 January 2012.
  3. ^ Remembering Husayn Muruwwah, the ‘Red Mujtahid’, Louis Allday, 16 Feb. 2017, Jadaliyya
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i Kaelen Wilson-Goldie, Rabih Mroué: Forms of Engagement, Nafas (Institute for Foreign Cultural Relations of Germany / Universes in Universe), July 2010. Accessed 22 January 2012.
  5. ^ Kaelen Wilson-Goldie (31 August 2007). "Arts, Briefly: Lebanon Retracts Ban on Performance Piece". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Off the Wall 2012 – Rabih Mroué: Looking for a Missing Employee, The Andy Warhol Museum (calendar). Accessed 22 January 2012.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Rabih Mroue's The Inhabitants of Images, e-flux. Listing for installation at the Prefix Institute of Contemporary Art, Toronto, Canada. Accessed 22 January 2012.
  8. ^ Face A / Face B Archived 19 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine commented at MACBA's website
  9. ^ Laura Allsop, Rabih Mroue, the Lebanese artist starting a creative rebellion, CNN, 2011-04-05. Accessed 22 January 2012.

“La Table et Le Monde Hors Scène: Les Objects Scéniques Dans Le Théâtre Du Réel” by Carol Martin (“Tables and the Offstage World: Stage Objects and Theatre of the Real”) in Les Théâtres documentaires edited by Beatrice Picon-Vallin, Montlellier, Deuxième époque, 2019.

“Table on Stage: The Rise of the Messenger” by Carol Martin in Performance Studies in Motion: International Perspectives and Practices in the Twenty-First Century edited by Sharon Aaronson-Lehavi, Atay Citron and David Zerbib, Methuen, 2014.

“Uploaded and Unsanctioned” Introduction to The Pixelated Revolution by Rabih Mroué by Carol Martin, TDR, T215, pp. 19-24, 2012. Special issue of TDR (T191) “Documentary Theatre.” Essays by Carol Martin, Thomas Irmer, Wendy S. Herford, Linda Ben-Zvi, Stephen Bottoms, Janelle Reinelt, Andre Lepecki, an Interview with Doug Wright, and Pieces by Tim Etchells, Igal Ezraty, Michael Murphy, and Elias Khoury and Rabih Mroué.

External links[]

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